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The History of Life on Earth
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History of Life Originated 3.5-4.0 billion years ago Fossil evidence: stromatolites
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Major Episodes in the History of Life Prokaryotes-3.6 billion years ago Prokaryotes diverged into Bacteria and Archaea 2-3 billion years ago Photosynthetic bacteria began producing O 2 2.5 billion years ago Eukaryotes emerged 2 billion years ago
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Prebiotic Chemical Evolution Abiotic synthesis and accumulation of monomers Formation of polymers Formations of protobionts Origin of heredity during or before protobiont appearance
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Protobionts Aggregates of abiotically produced molecules Maintain internal environment, different from surroundings Exhibit some life properties-irritability and metabolism Self-assemble Microspheres and liposomes
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Laboratory versions of protobionts
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RNA was probably the First Genetic Material If DNA, a primer would be necessary RNA can self-replicate RNA is autocatalytic Achieves unique tertiary structure (different phenotypes)-diversity!
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Abiotic Replication of RNA
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Hereditary Material Enabled Darwinian Evolution If Protobionts: 1.Incorporated genetic information 2.Selectively accumulated monomers 3.Used enzymes programmed by genes to make polymers 4.Grew and split Then: Variations would lead to natural selection Refinements would have accumulated Lead to the appearance of DNA
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Videos and Websites http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zufaN_a etZI&feature=fvwhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zufaN_a etZI&feature=fvw http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OandU MjhZ3g&NR=1&feature=fvwphttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OandU MjhZ3g&NR=1&feature=fvwp
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The Fossil Record and Geologic Time Role of sedimentary rocks Fossil dating, use of strata location vs. absolute dating Fossil record incomplete, favors species that existed for a long time, why? Role of continental drift Mass extinctions and adaptive radiations
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Key Events in Life’s History Photosynthesis-oxygen revolution-2.7 billion years ago (photosynthetic bacteria) First eukaryotes-2.1 billion years ago, result of endosymbiosis Origin of multicellularity-1.5 billion years ago Cambrian Explosion-535-525 million years ago first predators, first hard bodied organisms, Cnidaria, Porifera, and Mollusks, bilateral symmetry Colonization of land-began with cyanobacteria 1 billion years ago, necessary adaptations?
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Genesis of Eukaryotes: Serial Endosymbiosis? Membrane-bound nucleus Mitochondria, chloroplasts, and the endomembrane system Cytoskeleton 9 + 2 flagella Multiple chromosomes Mitosis, meiosis, and sex
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The Origin of Eukaryotes?
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Secondary Endosymbiosis
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Continental Drift Pangea: supercontinent, broke apart during Mesozoic era. Explains distribution of fossils and extant organisms. (lungfishes, marsupials) Generated by plate tectonics Can result in volcanoes (Krakatau, Tambora), tsunamis.
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Examples of Mass Extinctions Approximately 12 mass extinctions Permian extinctions-250 million years ago, 90% species (marine) eliminated Cretaceous extinctions-65 million years ago, 50% marine species, dinosaurs, many plants Asteroid impact (Alvarez or Impact Hypothesis), crater from Cretaceous extinction- 180 km dia. Yucatan coast Role of the Siberian Traps (caused O 2 to drop from 30% to 15% or lower during the Permian period)
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Consequences of Mass Extinctions Widespread adaptive radiations Causes?
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Mass extinctions
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DNA, RNA and Protein Comparisons DNA hybridizations-compare degree of similarity between two species Restriction maps DNA sequence analysis Homologous DNA sequences-mutations accumulate as species diverge Molecular clocks-number of amino acid substitutions is proportional to the elapsed time since divergence
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The Origin of Evolutionary Novelty How do novel features that define taxonomic groups above the species level arise? (wings as an example) Gradual refinement of existing adaptations Alternative functions Exaptation: structure that evolved in one context and later was adapted for another function. Examples: feathers, light hollow bones in birds
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Genes that control development and evolutionary novelty Sometimes a few changes in the genome causes major changes in the morphology. A system of regulatory genes coordinates activities of structural genes to guide the rate and pattern of development Allometric growth Heterochrony Paedomorphosis Homeosis
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Heterochrony-alteration in the time of change in the order of one or more events
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Allometric Growth-different body parts grow at different rates. Result: adult is shaped different form the juvenile.
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Paedomorphosis: type of heterochrony that describes a condition in which the time of sexual maturity is altered. Retention of ancestral juvenile structures in a sexually mature adult organism
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Homeosis-alteration in the placement of different body parts
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Hox genes Homeotic genes Responsible for where structures develop on the embryo Responsible for limb formation instead of fin formation
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